Real Estate investments come in all shapes and colors. You may be a landlord who owns one property and rents it out, you may be into flipping a few properties a year, or you may the owner of an entire complex. However small or big your investment portfolio, or your strategy, one thing is for sure, you need tools to help you make a savvy decision. In today’s recovering real estate market, there are a realm of tools available to help you search for properties, but once you are faced with options, how do you decide which properties make sense? How do you take the emotion out of buying? The latest entrant in this business is Flipt, which aims to take some of the emotion out of real estate purchase decisions and replace it with a more data-driven approach.Read more …. By Verifytenant.com

FICO scores have been around since the 1950's and became a major factor in determining a mortgage borrower's creditworthiness around 1995, when Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae began recommending their use in the lending process.

The score, which ranges from 300 to 850, factors in how long borrowers have had credit, how they are using it and repaying it, and if they have any judgements or delinquencies logged against them. However, consumers are soon going to start sharing more personal information when applying for a mortgage.

In an attempt to develop a more well-rounded picture of a person's finances beyond credit, tools are being developed to help lenders dig a little dipper.

Fair Isaac Corp, the company behind the widely used scoring formula, and data provider CoreLogic announced last year a collaboration that will result in a separate score that will become available to mortgage lenders and that will incorporate information about payday loans, evictions and child support payments. In the future, information on the status of utility, rent, and cellphone payments may also be included. Since last year, the credit reporting agencies have began to provide information about consumer's income and rental payment history as an option in their reports.While this new information may open the door to homeownership for many "thin-file" consumers, it may also make a borderline borrower look worse on paper.